And the fire spreads further:
Hoboken Mayor says Christie wanted a real estate development deal OKed in exchange for Sandy money
This is consistent with Rachel Maddow's story there was a similar deal quashed by Fort Lee mayor that was behind the 'revenge', not just the lack of endorsement of Christie for reelection. The NY Times reports on the story.
I'll say it: I had high hopes for Chris Christie, when after Hurricane Sandy he seemed to put the partisan thing behind him and seek out to work directly with Obama's government during the response stage. It earned him a lot of vitriol at the time and since from fellow Republicans, who evidently felt that making a show of disconnecting from the Federal government during Obama's presidency was more important than doing everything possible and necessary to provide disaster relief for constituents.
I'll also admit that when the very beginnings of this scandal began to break, I considered it just another manifestation of own-party maltreatment of Christie.
This latest allegation by the mayor of Hoboken that getting state-coordinated hurricane relief for her city was tied to her having to pull some strings to benefit the interests of Christie's port authority chief is horrific. I see that today she spoke with Federal prosecutors about her claims; a move I fully support.
I'll say it: I had high hopes for Chris Christie, when after Hurricane Sandy he seemed to put the partisan thing behind him and seek out to work directly with Obama's government during the response stage. It earned him a lot of vitriol at the time and since from fellow Republicans, who evidently felt that making a show of disconnecting from the Federal government during Obama's presidency was more important than doing everything possible and necessary to provide disaster relief for constituents.
I'll also admit that when the very beginnings of this scandal began to break, I considered it just another manifestation of own-party maltreatment of Christie.
This latest allegation by the mayor of Hoboken that getting state-coordinated hurricane relief for her city was tied to her having to pull some strings to benefit the interests of Christie's port authority chief is horrific. I see that today she spoke with Federal prosecutors about her claims; a move I fully support.
Not how I read the news reports. Umm, did you have a link with your news version?The Fort Lee story is really the other way around. The Fort Lee mayor was negotiating the financing to build a billion-dollar development project, and Christie shut down the Fort Lee access lanes at a delicate point that could have delayed or killed the project. When the lanes were reopened the financing was approved.
Not how I read the news reports. Umm, did you have a link with your news version?
Near the end of the two-page letter, Mr. Sokolich asked, “What do I do when our billion-dollar redevelopment is put online at the end of the next year?”
That query highlighted just how sensitive a matter the project was to Mr. Sokolich.
.....
If the development projects are completed, Mr. Sokolich will get credit for an accomplishment that eluded several of his predecessors.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/12/steve-kornacki-chris-christie-bridge-scandal_n_4585830.htmlKornacki explained that there is currently a billion dollar development project in Fort Lee, right next to where the lane closures occurred. The project is a keystone of Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich's tenure.
As Kornacki explains, the closure of two of the three access lanes may have been part of a larger effort to shut them down for good, which could have significantly diminished potential investors' interest in the project. Close the lanes, and the entire project could be derailed.
Stories like this always make me realize how little I understand politics. To me it makes no sense that Christie would have a vendetta against the Ft. Lee mayor and even less sense that he would want to kill this project, which is bound to bring in massive dollars to New Jersey, disproportionate to any satisfaction from screwing with the mayor.
Maybe one developer was a Christie backer and the other was not?
The motive originally theorized does not make sense either. Why would Christie expect someone in the opposition party to endorse him?
I agree if this happened she is doing the right thing. But why did she not go when it happened. She says she wanted to do what is best for Hoboken butI'll say it: I had high hopes for Chris Christie, when after Hurricane Sandy he seemed to put the partisan thing behind him and seek out to work directly with Obama's government during the response stage. It earned him a lot of vitriol at the time and since from fellow Republicans, who evidently felt that making a show of disconnecting from the Federal government during Obama's presidency was more important than doing everything possible and necessary to provide disaster relief for constituents.
I'll also admit that when the very beginnings of this scandal began to break, I considered it just another manifestation of own-party maltreatment of Christie.
This latest allegation by the mayor of Hoboken that getting state-coordinated hurricane relief for her city was tied to her having to pull some strings to benefit the interests of Christie's port authority chief is horrific. I see that today she spoke with Federal prosecutors about her claims; a move I fully support.
Could be, but it doesn't quite make sense, because they would need to permanently remove or reduce access to the development site to kill the project. They'd be better off throwing up administrative or legal hurdles.
The motive originally theorized does not make sense either. Why would Christie expect someone in the opposition party to endorse him?
I agree if this happened she is doing the right thing. But why did she not go when it happened. She says she wanted to do what is best for Hoboken but
is allowing this type of behavior best for anyone and also it seems to me if she had come out about the alledged threat at the beginning it would have helped Hoboken's chances for money.
300,000 was all Hoboken received of Sandy money.I was under the impression Hoboken did fairly well on Sandy money. Does anyone know where you can find a breakdown of who got what?
I agree if this happened she is doing the right thing. But why did she not go when it happened. She says she wanted to do what is best for Hoboken but
is allowing this type of behavior best for anyone and also it seems to me if she had come out about the alledged threat at the beginning it would have helped Hoboken's chances for money.
I was under the impression Hoboken did fairly well on Sandy money. Does anyone know where you can find a breakdown of who got what?
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/n-mayor-christie-held-sandy-aid-hostage-article-1.1584658Hoboken requested $127 million in Sandy recovery funds and got only $342,000, according to Zimmer. Christie’s camp said the Sandy-devastated city actually got some $70 million, but Zimmer said Sunday that was flood insurance money that had nothing to do with the recovery funds controlled by the governor.
She should not have gone public she should have gone to the appropriate authorizes.
But if she had gone public don't you think it would have made it hard for Christie to retaliate.
Isn't there an old proverb that says if you go after the King, you best kill him? She's a nobody mayor and he's a national figure who, as we can all clearly see now, engages in serious payback for his political enemies.
Incidentally, this is the same logic that wonders why rape victims or domestic violence victims or molestation victims don't just tell police or their families at the abuse happened. They say the same thing: they just didn't think anyone would believe them and things would just get much worse by telling.
But what she did do was document her conversations and we can look at the results and see that Hoboken got a pittance of the money Christie was doling out, even though that city was one of the hardest hit in the entire country.
Also, where's Christie in all of this? He's remarkably silent for a guy who likes to talk as much as he does.
Zimmer's comments Saturday and Sunday are a change from what she told CNN on January 11. She said then that while she wondered whether Sandy aid funds were being withheld because she didn't endorse the governor's re-election, she concluded that "I don't think that's the case."
"I don't think it was retaliation and I don't have any reason to think it's retaliation, but I'm not satisfied with the amount of money I've gotten so far," Zimmer told CNN then. She did not mention her concerns about the redevelopment project.